Last month, after tossing and turning in a creaky, supportless, too-springy, sad excuse for a bed, I had enough. It was time to get a good night’s sleep.

So, my boyfriend and I started contemplating the possibilities of a better bed. Our friends suggested Casper, a supposedly wonderful mattress. It sounded nice, but it lacked the je ne sais quoi we seek in all our purchases. We’re weird. We like devices, especially when they have motors and apps and Alexa integration. So we kept looking.

Superb social kept me coming back

Being a marketer myself, I was as fascinated and delighted by their approach to branding as I was by their product. Their marketing played a HUGE role in my decision to buy not just one of their insanely comfy mattresses, but the PowerBase too.

After we took the plunge, the waiting game began. We quickly realized we had no idea if a queen size mattress base would actually fit up two flights of stairs in our old New England apartment, so I turned to Twitter for a quick answer. Now, this is where my schoolgirl crush turned into a full-blown Sting-level obsession. Their social media game was On. Point.

@sam_the_editor Hi Sam, it basically shows up already put together. I hope you have strong friends or good neighbors.

This back and forth continued well after I (successfully) got my base into my apartment, and it not only made my experience one for the books, but it turned me into a devoted customer. I’ve already indulged in their one-of-a-kind sheets and have plans to get my hands on their pillows next.

What does my new bed have to do with marketing?

I’m not trying to sell you a mattress or sleep-related product (but if you’re in the market, you really should check out Purple. It’s sooo worth it!). What I really want is to highlight the power of their digital marketing. Because they’re doing pretty much everything right, and setting a good example for marketers everywhere.

Purple Communications Queen* Savannah Turk, who actually came to work at Purple from the content marketing agency that helped with their first Kickstarter back in September 2015, was kind enough to take some time and chat with me about Purple’s digital marketing efforts.

Purple: Redefining comfort and marketing from the ground up.

Now, she heads up the communications marketing for Purple, a startup comfort product company in Utah that specializes in innovative, transformative (and addicting) furniture. The reason she left agency life?

“The brand and the personality and being able to come and do something fun was a big motivation for me to work here,” Savannah shared. “It’s not just a boring mattress company.”

*Yes. That’s her actual title. At Purple, you get to choose your own. I think it’s just right.

A unique way to stand out from the crowd

Purple got its start with a Kickstarter campaign to launch their innovative, futuristic mattress design in September 2015. When they launched, one of the founders’ daughters was tasked with developing the brand messaging for the campaign.

“She’s in her 20s and fun and quirky and hilarious,” Savannah explained about the woman who inspired Purple’s off-beat, humor-driven content. “She just put a lot of her personality into it and it took off. It really resonated with people in the Kickstarter and so we just ran with it.”

And it worked. They’ve developed a very strong, hard-to-ignore brand that sets them apart from the other out-of-the-box mattress companies that have been popping up, and the company has only continued to grow.

In fact, their video marketing game is so strong that they set the bar for their niche.

“When you’re comparing our marketing to what everyone else in our industry is doing, no one else is doing video,” Savannah told me. “Now that we’re here, they’re all trying and they’re not doing it as well as we are. So that’s where we really differentiate ourselves marketing-wise.”

Video marketing that won’t put you to sleep (but the beds definitely will)

Their video marketing is such a major part of their content marketing strategy that they built a studio in their warehouse. Savannah told me they are able to film the majority of their content right in their own backyard, bringing in key video talent to assist the in-house videographer.

“Sometimes we’ll walk back there and there’ll be sumo wrestlers or Sasquatch or aliens… who knows!”

They’re also expanding their video marketing efforts. If it ain’t broke, why not keep building it? They recently hired their first in-house animator to explore that style of video as well as making moves to harness the power of live video, especially through Facebook.

“For the past three years, it seems like every year is the year of video and people are just still slowly catching on,” Savannah mused. “This is the year of live video. So we’re hoping to really play around with social media stories and making live video more interactive as well as having our big productions.”

“The founders are really passionate about having people in house,” Savannah explained. “So we do some agency work but they’re really about bringing good people on and having them live and breathe Purple. It helps our content a lot.”

While Purple has a good staff on hand for day to day needs, they also recognize the key advantage of having an external agency on board as well. Purple currently works with a handful of third-party agencies, including a small ad team based locally in Utah as well as directly with companies like Amazon and Twitter.

“It’s good to get outside opinions,” Savannah pointed out. “Sometimes we get so in the weeds we lose a little perspective. We’re so familiar with our products and our terminology that it takes someone else to say, ‘That doesn’t really make sense to the average consumer.’”

A plan for when content doesn’t strike gold

For the most part, Savannah told me this really hasn’t been a problem at Purple yet.

‘We kind of feel like Midas right now where everything turns to gold,” said Savannah. “It’s kind of terrifying. We don’t know when we’re going to have a huge failure.”

That’s not to say that every single piece of content they’ve created has been wildly successful though.

“Our biggest failure right now is we have some messaging that doesn’t always quite work, some videos that don’t resonate with people as well as other ones,” Savannah said.

When they create something that doesn’t meet expectations, Savannah and her team will look closely at what was and was not successful.

“We’re really nimble. We monitor everything and when we see that something isn’t converting the way we want it to, we go back to the drawing board and we tweak it or we put out new content or we do something to make it better.”

Is it working?

Beyond some campaigns not being as wildly successful as others, Savannah modestly told me the main issue they’ve faced is that their marketing is SO GOOD their production teams can barely keep up with demand. Tough problem to have, right?

If my adoration for Purple has piqued your curiosity, go check out their site*. The marketing is awesome, but it’s also backed by a really cool, really innovative technology.

*This recommendation is purely my own and is not in any way affiliated with Purple or Brafton. Purple did not ask me to plug their products. I just cannot help myself. Try it. See for yourself.

Samantha Gordon

Samantha Gordon is the Managing Editor of Brafton.com. With a diverse background writing and editing everything from blogs and whitepapers to romance and sci-fi, Samantha strives for greatness in grammar and quality.